“H.R. Giger’s World” ends up fitting as an apt subtitle since “Dark Star” focuses less on the man and more on the motivations molding his body of work.
SHREW'S NEST (2014 - Spanish)
“Shrew’s Nest” runs full speed at an exhilarating sprint once the tempo turns a corner, justifying the journey to get there as being worth the wait.
THE BOY (2015)
“The Boy” makes the most of its mood before its story becomes carried away with circling the wagons and waiting too long to go on the offensive.
THE NIGHTMARE (2015)
“The Nightmare” capitalizes so well on its mood of escalating tension that a waxing and waning interest level in the subjects and their stories has no choice but to sit in the second chair.
THE HALLOW (2015)
The film boils down to being straightforward practically to a fault, which should please anyone eager for a simple serving of traditional creature feature creeps.
DIRECTOR'S COMMENTARY: TERROR OF FRANKENSTEIN (2015)
Tim Kirk and Rodney Ascher deserve points for fusing irreverent pastiche with an original horror story ... But this particular experiment in creative entertainment is more failure than success.
TERROR OF FRANKENSTEIN (1977)
“Terror of Frankenstein” is ... of interest chiefly to students looking to score a C+ on a book report with a Cliff’s Notes cinema shortcut, where Universal and Hammer can only promise a failing grade.
COOTIES (2014)
“Cooties” is a broken film that deserves to be more enjoyable than it is, but only one hand is needed to count legitimate laughs.
LET US PREY (2014)
“Let Us Prey” has enough going for it to be worthwhile to thriller and horror fans hungry for a hearty helping of supernatural suspense, even if that interest turns out to be passing in the end.
THE TREATMENT (2014 - Dutch)
Herbots’ superb craftsmanship supersedes shortcomings just as perfect casting and adroit portrayals transcend a stereotypical roster of red herring suspects and traumatized victims.
JONAH LIVES (2012)
Effort doesn’t always translate into entertainment, and the greenness of those involved is what shines brightest on this movie’s screen.
FROM THE DARK (2014)
More interested in creeping chills than gotcha boos, "From the Dark" never lets scaled-down production design stand in the way of crafty camerawork making the most of unsettling atmosphere.
ROADSIDE (2013)
With “Roadside,” it doesn’t appear as though writer/director Eric England has anything more in mind than to aim for mediocrity and barely hit the bullseye with a plop.
INFERNAL (2015)
... what they record results in a head-on collision of the “found footage” and demonic child subgenres, leaving “Infernal” to beat two dead horror horses with one limp stick.
HOOKED UP (2013)
“Hooked Up” is only 70-something minutes long, yet cannot find material to fill that space that isn’t annoying, boring, or both at the same time.
THE FINAL GIRLS (2015)
“The Final Girls” doesn’t just point out tropes with a wink ... it plants well-worn chestnuts into clever setups before seeing them through to funny, original punchlines.
HANGMAN (2015)
Although bookended by a pair of frightful sequences, the main meat of “Hangman” is almost completely devoid of anything genuinely nerve rattling.
THE INVITATION (2015)
This is how “slow burn” takes an intentionally torturous wick to a violently erupting conclusion with true efficiency and exhilarating effectiveness.
HE NEVER DIED (2015)
"He Never Died" is undeniably a Henry Rollins highlight reel and in that regard, no fan could ask for a finer showcase of his unique onscreen presence.
POD (2015)
"Pod" is a dish best served cold, with limited foreknowledge and without expectation for anything more robust than a lean, mean blend of paranoid thriller and what’s-behind-the-door suspense.
Everyone else who has no problem with a fright flick that feels like “Lizzie McGuire” decided to get dark with a PG-13 Halloween special should do just fine.